The first-ever Edmonton PARKSHOW – a fashion and art showcase featuring local designers and artists – took over the second floor of the University of Alberta’s Saville Community Sports Centre. On a late November day in 2014, the fashion community rallied together to support the newest collections by Edmonton designers.
One collection felt right at home in the sports venue: The “gothletic” collection, a rebellious take on the athletic inspired fashion trend that, at the time, was just making its way through fashion shows worldwide. And while runways abroad featured similar styles, it was this Edmonton line that added a subversive edge. Models in dark, brooding makeup cascaded down the walk in sheers, cutouts and T-shirts sporting ’90s-inspired athletic wear logos corrupted into cheeky anti-ad campaigns. Provocative slogans such as “Just Don’t” and “adictd” accompanied upside-down Nike swooshes and Adidas logos, creating a devil-may-care attitude juxtaposed against the win-at-all-costs world of sports.
The cutting edge looks were the work of Edmonton designer Alisha Schick, presented under her line, Suka Clothing. If you recognize either of the names, it’s because Schick and Suka have been local fashion mainstays for more than a decade. And, though she has been hit-and-miss in predicting trends for her line in the past, this collection was a home run, according to Bamboo Ballroom co-owner Anastasia Boruk. “It was completely on par with what was happening on the runways. Everyone seemed to be featuring some version of athletic wear, so it’s very current,” Boruk says. “And she hit the nail on the head. I mean, she was working on that [collection] over a year ago, and even put her own spin on it with the gothic look, and we are still seeing it on the runways now. I was really impressed.”
It’s high praise coming from a retailer who has worked with Schick for so long. Even before Schick was employed at the Bamboo Ballroom as its in-house designer, where she has been for the last five years, Suka Clothing has been in production since 2007, when the Bamboo Ballroom and the now-closed Meese Clothing in St. Albert took a chance on her designs. Before then, the young Schick, who had graduated from MC College’s fashion design and apparel production program in 2001, had struggled to find her place as a designer, spending most of her time working retail at Foosh while selling her clothes at local markets. Back in the early 2000s, after all, most fashion outlets were grabbing onto the kitschy, cute hipster aesthetic, a far cry from Suka’s hip hop- and punk-influenced bad-girl-gone-straight concept – one that still echoes in the brand today. “Suka means a couple different things in a couple different languages. It means ‘to like’ in Indonesian, and then, in Polish, it means something like ‘bad girl’ or ‘bitch’ or ‘slut’ or whatever,” Schick says.